Can Oklahoma learn from Louisiana’s criminal justice reform?

Quinton is an Oklahoma native who started his radio career with KOSU Public Radio in 2011. He’s a graduate of Oklahoma State University. Before joining StateImpact, Quinton spent three years reporting in South Central and Southeast Alaska. Quinton loves writing, reading and has an intense relationship with his Netflix account.

Every day, Oklahoma Department of Corrections Director Joe Allbaugh sits at his desk and tries to make a severely overcrowded, understaffed prison system work.

“I’ve been preoccupied with trying to figure out where we’re going to put all these people because we’re way over capacity,” Allbaugh said.

This year, Oklahoma became the nation’s top incarcerator — a title that formerly belonged to Louisiana. But officials in the Bayou State said it reduced its prison population by 7.6 percent in less than a year by passing a sweeping package of reforms.

Louisiana and Oklahoma both started new criminal justice reform efforts around the same time. Officials in each state asked the U.S. Department of Justice and nonprofit Pew Charitable Trusts for help with task forces that would make recommendations on the best ways to keep people out of prison.

Task force recommendations

Louisiana legislators passed most of the recommendations targeting nonviolent crimes. Oklahoma voters in 2016 approved sentencing reform through two state questions, but the Legislature did not pass many of the task force recommendations.

Today, Louisiana is celebrating results while Allbaugh is asking for more prisons to hold a growing population of inmates. The consultants who helped Oklahoma’s task force draft its recommendations predict Oklahoma’s limited reforms will only slow prison population growth.

Allbaugh said he wished Oklahoma lawmakers were as bold as Louisiana’s.

Quinton Chandler / StateImpact Oklahoma

Tulsa County Judge Doug Drummond believes several policy recommendations the Legislature didn’t adopt could reduce the state’s prison population significantly.

Tulsa County District Judge Doug Drummond, who was part of the 21-member task force alongside Allbaugh, said Oklahoma “made some good first steps,” but hit roadblocks when the task force sent recommendations to the Legislature.

Legislative compromise

Some of the more powerful legislation Oklahoma lawmakers approved reworked the state’s parole system and redefined punishments for property crimes and probation violations. Other measures targeting the prison population expanded opportunities for modifying sentences and gave courts more discretion in sentencing.

But Drummond said the task force asked for more. One of his biggest concerns is that many repeat nonviolent offenders are still in line for harsher sentences for new convictions. Legislators reduced the severity of sentencing for some repeat offenders, but Drummond said they didn’t go far enough.

“In some cases, before we got started you could go all the way up to life on some of these crimes, and I think you just need to put a cap on that,” Drummond said.

Louisiana legislators were more aggressive on the issue.

Drummond was disappointed lawmakers rejected new programs to help people transition from prison and return to productive public lives, and they failed to create new substance abuse and mental health treatment programs.

Len Engel, director of policy and campaigns for the Boston-based Crime and Justice Institute and consultant for Oklahoma’s task force, said several of the recommendations legislators rejected or reworked would have heavily cut the number of people sent to prison, especially one policy that dealt with low-level probation violators.

“The task force really wanted to constrain the use of prison for people who are on probation, clearly have addiction or other treatment needs but are sent back to prison for violating the terms of their supervision,” Engel said.

Oklahoma lawmakers did approve part of that request, but Engel said the original recommendation was heavily compromised.

Reducing 85 percent crimes

Allbaugh, the state prison director, agrees with Engel and Drummond on some of these points, he also wants lawmakers to weaken sentences on a category of mostly violent crimes.

“The 85 percent crimes that are killing us right now — they have not been touched,” Allbaugh said.

Allbaugh recommended changing the requirement so that 50 percent of sentences would have to be served before early release. That recommendation didn’t even make it through Oklahoma’s task force. Most task force members thought it would be impossible to get lawmakers to sign off on reduced sentences for violent crimes.

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